david jolly, we all, and i m guilty of doing this in my career talking about politics, we take lessons from primaries that may not actually exist. but this one is interesting because, one, it s a test of loyalty to trump, mccormick and his wife dina powell. dina was the number two to h.r. mcmaster, gave her a lot of legitimacy to not just donald trump but ivanka. and then you have dr. oz, when trump endorsed him, the headline in the daily news was fraud endorses quack or quack endorses fraud, she is, in some ways, the most maga pure. you re watching this race, do you care about this race? does this race matter? i love this race niccole i
to conflate them with the 12 million people living here is an incitement that is pretty ugly. we ve heard that. it s a slightly different list of crimes that evolves over times. it updates. there are new crimes. but it is, you know, this office of immigrant crime stuff he has been trying to sell from the very beginning. the fact is, we ve said it before we ll say it again, native-born americans commit crimes at a higher rate than non-native-born immigrants. all crimes. driving infractions. all crimes. it is a demagogic old saw to try to pick out horrific things you re trying to attribute to one minority group, particularly one powerless minority group in order to turn the majority against them. the president is singing that same song. it is exactly the same scripts. i felt like i was in cleveland. i remember watching that litany in cleveland and being somewhat horrified and shocked this is what was being delivered. to niccole s point here.
especially in the world war ii generation that we had, working for the family, not for themselves. no ego, just working for the family and being sort of true to the family. bill never had anything like that. and i think he suffered from it, knowing what a man should do when he grows up. what do you think? no, i think you re right. and i think, you know, the whole experience, niccole, you know this, the atmosphere there of warmth and family is something that bill clinton i m not surprised he would practically drop in unannounced, ride on fidelity. it was an interesting relationship. to the point that when clinton started having heart trouble, it was bush 41 looking after his medical care and assuring doctors it would be okay for them to fly to a funeral of a pope, make sure his health is not jeopardized by this.
it s very impressive that the prosecutors questions have done nothing but help her credibility. this was a woman living her life in california just as we watched her come back to the witness table surrounded by these burly security people. that s a visual statement of what has happened to her life as members of the committee file back in. niccole what do you think is happening among members of the team huddled with brett kavanaugh in an adjacent room watching this in realtime? i spoke to some of kavanau kavanaugh s allies and people who have been steering him through the process of the interview in preparation for today, and there s a lot of concern. they, i think he is angry. they feel that he has to do a very careful balancing act when he takes the stand, but there is additional angst. there is added, you know, second
women achieve that. niccole, are you in the land of presentation of images. right. and by the way streetcar, extraordinary. anyone who comes anywhere new york should come see you in that play. is this just working out our owe emotions or something meaningful about as african-american women, are trying to think through our self-presentations? i think there are so many angles to analyze it, and that movie good hair, i think tracy thoms, a fellow actress, she said it best, very simply, it s amazing that it s considered revolutionary to wear my hair the way it grows out of my head. and i never forgot that, this is just the way it grows out of my head. this is the beginning. this is my is ness. just how it is. for me, i can also consider that, but i also my hair